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Thriftshop Debutante
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Publishers dusting off old-time comics characters

AP Photo/Tom Uhlman

Paul Dubuc, left, and Mark Thompson look over comic strips at Checker Publications in Dayton, Ohio where they find old comics and comic strips, secure the reprint rights, give them a computer-brushed makeover and package them in paperback form for sale.

James Hannah
Associated Press Writer
Dec. 11, 2003 12:00 AM


MIAMISBURG, Ohio - Holy reprints, Batman!

Old-time comics are back! Thanks in part to Mark Thompson and other publishers who have tapped into the vintage funnies market.

Thompson's Checker Book Publishing finds old comics and comic strips, secures the rights to reprint them, gives them a computer-brushed makeover and packages them in paperback form. He sells them to comics stores, bookstores and peddles them online.

Checker, founded in 2001, is one of the few companies that devotes itself to reprinting the older, classic comics, said Calvin Reid, comics editor at Publisher's Weekly. Smaller companies may do the same thing but without Checker's wide distribution, he said.

Industry giants Marvel Comics and DC Comics also reprint some of their classics, recognizing the demand from an older generation trying to salvage the artifacts of its youth.

"It's an exploration of the American culture in the broadest sense. And if people don't collect and publish this stuff, it's lost forever," comics historian and author Robert C. Harvey said.

Reid said that while comic books still make up less than 1 percent of bookstore sales, they are the fastest-growing category.

"This is opening up American audiences to notions that comics can be like anything, like any book," he said. "In the last five years or so, the book industry has started to pay attention."

Checker operates out of this Dayton suburb with three employees and a part-time intern. Comic books are scattered on the tops of folding tables, while paperback reprints stand on a display shelf. A few computers and drafting tables fill out the office. The 36-year-old Thompson, who often wears blue jeans and a flannel shirt to work, named the company after his cat.

Most Checker reprints are science fiction or adventure comics.

This fall, the company released vintage reprints of Steve Canyon, the blond-haired, square-jawed Air Force pilot. Reprints of "Flash Gordon" and "Dick Tracy" also recently came out.

"They are reprinting some of the most highly regarded and acclaimed comics writers," Reid said. "Some of the books they do may not be the most famous, but they are of quality that they know there will be a demand for."

"Steve Canyon," which appeared from 1947 to 1988, was created by Milton Caniff. At the height of its popularity it was carried by 600 newspapers. However, papers began dropping the strip because of protests against the Vietnam War, Harvey said.

Seattle-based Fantagraphics Books also reprints vintage comics along with publishing news ones.

"There has been a new generation of comic-art fans that have rediscovered this stuff," said Eric Reynolds, editor and marketing director.

Last year, Fantagraphics reprinted "Krazy Kat," a cat in love with a mouse that didn't return the affection. All 10,000 copies sold out in four months. The company has reprinted "Little Orphan Annie" and plans to reprint "Peanuts" next year.

U.S. retailers sold about 100 million graphic novels - collections of serialized comics, current or classic, in book form - in 2002, up from 75 million in 2001, according to ICv2, a consulting company in Madison, Wis., that follows the industry.

Thompson wouldn't disclose Checker's sales figures but said they doubled last year from the year before.

At the end of 2002, the company had four books in print. It currently has nine out, with 10 more due in the next four months.

"It's pretty much picking the right books," Thompson said. "The stuff that we explore varies from marginally easy to get to completely impossible to get. Sometimes we just get plain lucky."

After making inquiries at the Cincinnati Public Library, he discovered the works of Winsor McCay, a newspaper cartoonist who worked in Cincinnati and New York and produced the "Little Nemo" strip in the early 1900s. Thompson expected to get microfilm, which is more difficult to reprint. However, the library had kept bound, printed editions of McCay's strips in the basement.

"I got the books, and they had about an inch thick of dust on them," Thompson recalled.

The comics are scanned into a computer, which removes yellowing and blotches. Black-and-white comics can be colorized but Thompson likes to remain faithful to how they originally appeared.

It usually takes a month to reproduce the comics into a book format and about three months to print the books. The paperbacks are usually sold for $15 to $20 apiece, although some cost as much as $30.

Checker's customers include both collectors and casual readers from 16 to 60. Thompson has filled orders from Italy, Sweden, Norway, Brazil and Spain.

William Avitt, 23, said he often buys paperback reprints of recent comics and would be interested in some of the classics. "They don't have superhero comics in the funny pages anymore," he said as he browsed at Mavericks comics store in nearby Kettering.

Avitt, dressed in a black Superman T-shirt and ball cap, said buying paperbacks can be cheaper than purchasing individual comics and saves him from having to wait a week for each new installment.

Dennis Murphy, 29, said reprinting old comics introduces them to new audiences - children.

"They need to do anything they can to keep this stuff going," he said, looking over the new comics.

Thompson, who had been working at a newspaper, decided to begin publishing comic books in 1993, when his research showed there were 10,000 comic book stores. But by the time his first book came out, in 1996, only about 2,000 stores remained. He noticed an interest in older, vintage comics and so went for that niche.

He came up with a wish list of 900 comic books and strips and began contacting people who owned the rights. He said owners receive a cash advance and a percentage of sales, near the industry standard of 5 percent.

Harry Guyton, Caniff's nephew and executor of his estate, said he agreed to the reprints because the strips don't do anyone any good just sitting on the shelf.

"We have tried to keep Milton's name alive," Guyton said. "Steve Canyon was a hero to a lot of people. We just want to bring it back."


(I copied the article from here )

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Fat Cramer
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This is a good project, I hope they succeed and expand it. It would be interesting to see if "children" go for any of this; I would think it will be more people interested in comics history, or those who may remember the old strips from childhood.

Nostalgia is a strange business. I thought Steve Canyon was a lousy strip when I was a kid, but I'd probably shell out for the collection now. Then there's Mary Worth, Rex Morgan, M.D., the Phantom... Drawn & Quarterly is working on Gasoline Alley and someone (D&Q?) is doing Prince Valiant.

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Holy Cats of Egypt!

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Lightning Lad
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Thanks for the article Teeds. I wouldn't mind being in that business myself, collecting the older strips no one has seen in years. I think I'd go for the Katajammer (sp?) Kids and Terry and the Pirates.

The article also mentioned Flash Gordon. What about Buck Rogers? That should be another no-brainer, IMO.

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Greybird
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When these older strips get into reprint editions, though, those who want them should snap them up quickly. These smaller operations, unlike DC, don't have the capital to keep the material around in plates and press setups for potential additional printings.

Those buying a series of "L'il Abner" reprint books were stunned, when that was reaching more than 40 volumes, that the publisher was halting the series and didn't have the resources to keep printing any of the books. (So I was told by, I believe, the catalog from BudPlant.com.)

[ December 16, 2003, 04:43 AM: Message edited by: Greybird ]

From: Starhaven Consulate, City of Angels | Registered: Jul 2003  |  IP: Logged | Report this post to a Moderator
   

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